It's art, for the Facebook generation

July 25 06:05:01 AM, Yahoo News

The art installation 'DIY GORI: seed_1216944000' by South Korean artist Jee Hyun Oh, being displayed at the 'International Symposium on Electronic Art 2008' in Singapore, is seen in this undated handout. (International Symposium on Electronic Art 2008/Handout/Reuters)

Reuters - If like many people in our technology-ruled world you can't live without Google, video games, digital media and social networking sites like Facebook, this is your kind of art exhibit.

For just over a week from Friday, the "International Symposium on Electronic Art 2008," a leading global media arts event, will showcase 16 artworks that transform the technology we all use on a daily basis into exhibits created to get you thinking about the state of the world we live in.

"Technology does not work in a cultural vacuum," ISEA2008 artistic director Gunalan Nadarajan told Reuters. "Culture very often is the basis of technological development but that is a relationship that is not sufficiently marked."

The exhibits, on display at the National Museum of Singapore, were selected by an international jury from an open call for submissions in 2007.

Media artists were required to submit proposals for works they wished to develop and that took their inspiration from ISEA08's five themes: whether technology renders our physical location unimportant; how technology affects our perception of reality; crowd sourcing or the "wiki" phenomenon; "fun" science and whether technology has made our world borderless.

The chosen artists then spent several months in Singapore, working with local technology labs, in an experiment the curators hoped would push the boundaries of both art and science.

As expected, most of the exhibits are interactive.

"Civilization V" by Serbia's Eastwood-Real Time Strategy Group is a modification of empire-building video game series "Civilization," which highlights the battle for dominance between user-driven websites, and where instead of pillaging, visitors use tactics like "emotional blackmail" and "love bombing."

Macau artist Lai Mei Kei's "Does it make scents to have fun?" is another interactive game, in which users deploy their sense of smell rather than the usual sight, sound and agility.

Sound forms the basis of "Run Silent, Run Deep" by Australian artists Nigel Helyer and Daniel Woo, who made an audio portrait of Singapore which visitors can navigate much like online maps.

Kelly Jaclynn Andres explores the concept of walking in someone else's shoes in "Finally, We Hear One Another," where visitors are equipped with wearable speakers and microphones that use wireless technology to transmit the sound of one person to the earphones of another.

Environmental concerns are also highlighted in "Sourcing Water" and "The Water Book (An Encyclopedia of Water)" as well as Singapore-based Syntfarm's "Syntboutique" which presents natural objects necessary to self-sustaining Mongolian nomads as consumer goods, displayed in boutique showcases.

"DIY GORI:see_1216944000" by Korean Jee Hyun Oh is one of the exhibit's larger works and consists of a corrugated cardboard scroll carrying every revision to a Wiki site published, while "Exodus" by design collective Metahaven questions the supposed neutrality of Internet search engines.

"We believe this exhibit is especially relevant in today's 'Facebook' world, where we don't question technology because it has become so integrated into our lives," Nadarajan said.

"Art helps to questions the functional paradigm about how we use materials, which is in turn radically important to the development of technology."

ISEA2008 Juried Exhibition

25 July to 3 August

National Museum of Singapore

Free admission

(Editing by Jerry Norton)

Related articles

  • Microsoft set to release Silverlight 2
    InfoWorld - Microsoft's Silverlight 2 browser plug-in technology for rich Internet applications will be generally available on Tuesday along with supportive development tools, the company said during a…
  • Vaunted Michelin guide adds mobile Internet to its review menu
    AFP - Michelin guides, lauded as roadmaps to the world's finest cuisine, will be delivered to iPhones and other "smart" mobile devices as the century-old publication embraces the Internet age.
  • New service to stop loose lips from crashing cars
    AP - When David Teater's 12-year-old son, Joe, was killed in 2004 by a driver who was talking on a cell phone, he tried to cut back on his own habit of driving and talking. It turned out to be very difficult.
  • Bush signs RIAA-backed intellectual-property law
    CNET - Updated at 12:45 p.m. PDT with quotes.
  • Sony Says PS3 Price Will Remain Firm for Holidays
    NewsFactor - The Tokyo Game Show is, to put it mildly, a noisy event as game manufacturers crank up the volume on their latest racing or military combat products. But the loudest sound may have come from…
  • Huge Credit Fraud Ring Sends Europeans' Data To Pakistan
    marshotel excerpts from a story at the Wall Street Journal: "European law-enforcement officials uncovered a highly sophisticated credit-card fraud ring that funnels account data to Pakistan from hundreds…
  • 10 Forces Guiding the Future of Scripting
    snydeq writes "InfoWorld examines the platforms and passions underlying today's popular dynamic languages, and though JavaScript, Perl, PHP, Python, Ruby, Groovy, and other scripting tools are fast achieving…
  • Joost relaunching TV site as online shows abound
    AP - Forget about the boob tube. Places to watch TV on the Internet are proliferating, from NBC Universal and News Corp.'s Hulu to Joost — a site that plans to relaunch Tuesday to make it a more interactive…
  • Free US wireless network a step closer
    AFP - A free nationwide wireless Internet network has moved one step closer to becoming a reality in the United States following a key finding by the US Federal Communications Commission (FCC).
  • Microsoft Woos Developers Under the Silverlight
    CWmike writes to tell us that with the impending release of their Silverlight 2.0 product, Microsoft is poised to enact the next phase of their plan, wooing developers and designers directly. Microsoft…
  • UK university holds artificial intelligence test
    AP - Computers argued, cracked jokes and parried trick questions, all part of an annual test of artificial intelligence carried out at the University of Reading.
  • Yahoo Hacker 'Mafiaboy' Eight Years On
    An anonymous reader writes "Eight years ago Mafiaboy (Michael Calce) knocked Yahoo offline. Today he he works as a legitimate security consultant and has just published a book documenting his criminal…
  • FCC Green-Lights Wireless Free Internet
    NewsFactor - The Federal Communications Commission has released an engineering report that opens the door for the FCC to apportion a chunk of wireless spectrum for free Internet services across the nation.
  • Windows 7 To Dial Down UAC
    Barence writes "Engineers working on Windows 7 have admitted Vista's User Account Control was too intrusive, and are promising to tone it down in the forthcoming Windows 7. 'We've heard loud and clear…
  • EU warns youth: turn your MP3 players down!
    Reuters - Millions of youngsters across Europe could suffer permanent hearing loss after five years if they listen to MP3 players at too high a volume for more than five hours a week, EU scientists warned…
  • MySpace gives little guys online ad muscle
    AFP - MySpace on Monday unleashed a tool to let small operators with tight budgets easily target online advertising to preferred demographics on the world's leading social networking website.
  • New York Times Says Thin Clients Are Making a Comeback
    One of the seemingly eternal questions in managing personal computers within organizations is whether to centralize computing power (making it easy to upgrade or secure The One True Computer, and its data),…
  • Is the era of easy credit over for the long haul?
    AP - An inflatable gorilla beckoned from the roof of Don Brown Chevrolet in St. Louis, servers doled out free bowls of pasta and a salesman urged potential customers to "come on up under the canopy and…
  • Elcomsoft Claims WPA/WPA2 Cracking Breakthrough
    secmartin writes "Russian security firm Elcomsoft has released software that uses Nvidia GPUs to speed up the cracking of WPA and WPA2 keys by a factor of 100. Since the software allows them to network…
  • Microsoft Quietly Previews PC Advisor Repair Tool
    notthatwillsmith writes "On Friday, Microsoft invited members of the Windows Feedback Program to try out a preview of a new application, the Microsoft PC Advisor. The new tool promises to 'continuously…
  • New 'Xbox Experience' Too Much For Some 360s
    PC Magazine - There's a lot to look forward to in the upcoming New Xbox Experience -- set to launch on November 19 -- but for those who own Xbox 360s without a hard drive or a 256MB memory card, you may…
  • US video game guru heads for space as tourist
    AFP - American millionaire video game guru Richard Garriott followed in his astronaut father's footsteps Sunday, blasting off aboard a Russian rocket to become the world's sixth space tourist.
  • Kenya's elephants send text messages to rangers
    AP - The text message from the elephant flashed across Richard Lesowapir's screen: Kimani was heading for neighboring farms.
  • Loebner Talks AI
    Mighty Squirrel writes "This is a fascinating interivew with Hugh Loebner, the academic who has arguably done more to promote the development of artifical intelligence than anyone else. He founded the…
back to top
News Buzz © 2007. About Us Politics | Entertainment | Business | Tech